Atlanta will continue to allow 10-year-old taxis to operate in the city under legislation slated for adoption Monday by the Atlanta City Council.
This is to be the fourth waiver of the age limit on the city’s taxi fleet since Mayor Kasim Reed’s administration began an effort in July 2011 to clean and modernize the city’s fleet of up to 1,600 vehicles for hire.
This effort may gain new life in the council in 2015.
The pending legislation calls on the council’s Public Safety Committee to consider a report on the taxi industry that it says was submitted to Reed’s administration in 2013.
The report is the result of an effort led by Central Atlanta Progress, in conjunction with the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau and Atlanta Committee for Progress. ACP represents the city’s leading civic and business leaders in their effort to promote Atlanta’s economic development.
CAP issued a request for proposals in May 2013 to gather information about the current state of Atlanta’s taxi industry. The report was to include information on possible equipment upgrades, green vehicles, and a specific strategy to implement an array of forward-looking proposals.
The legislation that’s on the council’s consent agenda was amended in the Public Safety Committee to say:
In the years since Reed first called for a sweeping overhaul of Atlanta’s taxi industry, Atlanta has developed a pattern of waiving the age limit on the city’s taxi fleet.
Since December 2012, the council has voted three times to allow older vehicles to operate rather than risk having hundreds of taxis taken off the road because of their age. Monday’s vote is expected to be the fourth waiver.
The reasons over time have been the same as those cited in the paper to be voted on Monday. The proposals tend to cite the most recent legislation that waived the age limit:
Sponsors of the paper include: